Title: Pediatric potpourri
1Pediatric potpourri
- Edward Les, MD
- May 6, 2004
2Agenda Common pediatric ED problems not
covered elsewhere in curriculum
- Infantile colic
- Neonatal conjunctivitis
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Breast-feeding issues
- Omphalitis
- Basic rules of fluid management
- Breath-holding events
- Constipation
- Pediatric oncology briefs
- Otitis media
3Case
- 3-week-old boy brought to ED with c/o emesis
since first week of life - Formula changed twice with no improvement
- Effortless spitting up after each feed
- Birthweight 7 lbs 2 oz, now 8 lbs
4Whats appropriate rateof weight gain for babes?
- Regain BW by 10 days
- then 20-30 g per day 1st 3 months
- Double BW by 5 months of age
- 15-20 g /day 3-6 months
- 10-15 g/day 6-9 months
- 10 g/day 9-12 months
5Gastroesophageal refluxPrevalence?
- gt 40 of infants regurgitate gtonce/day
- 50 resolve by 6 months, 75 by 12 months, 95
by 18 months - Nelson et al, Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 2000
- Orenstein, Pediatr Rev, 1999
6Gastroesophageal reflux
- Not a disease in most cases
- simply reflects immature LES tone
- only 1 in 300 infants has significant reflux
with associated complications - Nelsons Pediatrics 2000
7Name 5 complications of infant GE reflux
- 1. Parental anxiety
- the biggie
- 2. Esophagitis
- (arching, irritability, Sandifer)
- Failure to thrive
- Apnea/choking (ALTE)
- 5. Recurrent aspiration
8GE reflux diagnosis
- Clinical!!!
- Confirmation of more severe reflux
- 24 hour pH probe
- Milk scan
- UGI barium not sens/specific
9GE reflux treatment options
Simple GER Reassurance, smaller/more frequent feeds, thickened feeds, positional therapy
Esophagitis Antacids, H2 receptor blockers, metoclopramide
FTT Nutritional rehab, NG feeds, may need fundoplication
Apnea Monitoring, may need fundo
Recurrent aspiration May need fundo
Consultation with peds or GI
10Case
- Teary, very stressed 23-year-old first time mom
with 3-day-old breast-fed little girl - worried that baby not getting enough
- seems hungry, spends 40 minutes nursing but is
on and off repeatedly, cries a lot - my breasts are REALLY SORE, and Im not sure I
even have enough milk for her. - I called HealthLink to see if I could give her
formula and the nurse gave me a 10 minute
lecture about the importance of breast-feeding.
11Babys exam
- No dysmorphism moderate jaundice
- Alert, rouses easily, strong cry
- AF normal, roots, v. strong suck,
oropharynx/palate normal - Normal RR bilat
- Chest clear, CVS normal, good pulses sl. mottled
extremities - Abdomen/umbilicus normal
- Normal female genitalia and anus
- Spine/hips normal
- Normal Moro, grasp, tone, reflexes
12Eds rules of infant nutrition
- 1. Breast is best..
- but ultimately the kid simply needs enough to
eat!!! - 2. Lactation consultants are your friends
13Signs of inadequate intake in BF
infant Neifert, Clin Perinatol 1999
- Irregular or non-sustained sucking at breast
- lt 1 wet diaper per feed
- Nursing lt 10 minutes/breast each feed also,
shouldnt be gt 25 minutes/breast - Failure to demand to nurse at least 8 times daily
- Taking only 1 breast at each feeding
- Crying, fussing, and appearing hungry after most
feedings - Too much weight loss in first week, suboptimal
gain thereafter -
14BF strategies
- Nipple care
- Exposure to air, keep dry b/w feeds, apply
lanolin, manual milk expression, more freq
shorter feeds, nipple shields - Proper technique
- Feed when hungry
- Ensure proper latch watch babe feed in ED
- Most babies are not avid suckers in the first
three days by day 4 they wake up and start
packing on the weight theyve lost - Supplemental bottle feeds with manually expressed
milk or formula if necessary - nipple confusion is overblown!!
15BF strategies
- Before assuming mom has insufficient milk,
exclude 3 possibilites - Errors in feeding technique
- Remediable maternal factors diet, lack of rest,
or emotional distress - Physical disturbances in the baby that interfere
with eating or weight gain
16Case
- 4-week-old babe presents with very anxious
parents hes been crying incessantly for
several hours, completely inconsolable several
other episodes over past few days, seems to be
getting worse. Otherwise feeding well, 6 wet
diapers/day, stooling well, no fever. Previously
well. - Approach?
17How much crying is normal?
- At 2 weeks 2 hours per day
- Increases to 3 hours at 6 weeks, then declines to
1 hour at 12 weeks
18Infantile colic
- Excessive crying or fussiness
- Occurs in 10-20 of infants
- Defined as paroxysms of crying in an otherwise
healthy infant for gt 3 hours/day on gt 3
days/week, usually begins 3 weeks of age and
resolves at around 3 months of age
If things havent settled by 4 months, consider
alternate dx
19Colic
- Intense crying for several hours, usually in late
afternoon or evening - Often infant appears to be in pain, may have legs
drawn up, may have slight abdominal distension - May have temporary relief with passage of gas
- Repercussions
- early discontinuation of BF
- Multiple formula changes
- Parental anxiety and distress
- Increased incidence of child abuse
20Colic etiology?
- Unknown
- ? Temperament
- ? Ineffective parental response to crying
- ? Overfeeding
- ? Hunger
-
21Colic diff dx?
- Rule out
- Hair tourniquet
- Corneal abrasion
- Incarcerated hernia
- Consider abuse (shaken baby)
- Other (ie reflux esophagitis, UTI, inguinal
hernia, testicular torsion, intussusception, etc)
22Hair tourniquet
23Colic management
- Reasonably effective
- Counseling/ reassurance
- Respite care
- Feeding/holding/rocking/sleeping/diaper change
- Routine burping, avoid over/underfeeding
- F/U with GP or peds to provide support and ensure
no organic etiology
- Rarely effective
- Formula changes
- Simethicone to decrease intestinal gas
- Music, car rides, swings etc
- ? Phenobarb or benadryl for occasional relief
24Case
- 10 day old female with foul-smelling discharge
from umbilicus - Afebrile, feeding/voiding/pooping well, no red
flags on history - Just a smelly belly button or something more?
25Omphalitis
- Purulent, foul-smelling discharge with erythema
of surrounding skin - Secondary to poor cord hygiene
- S. aureus/Group A Strep/Gm s
- Tx topical care and systemic antibiotics (
26Omphalitis complications
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Sepsis
- Portal vein thrombosis
- Hepatic abscesses
27When should the umbilical cord separate?
- Usually w/i 2 weeks
- Delayed separation think of possible leukocyte
adhesion defect
28Case
- 3 day old babe
- Red eye with discharge
- Differential diagnosis?
- Chemical irritation (esp AgNO3)
- Nasolacrimal duct obstruction w/
dacryocystitis - Gonorrhea
- Chlamydia
- Herpes simplex
- Infantile glaucoma
- Diagnosis gram stain, culture, flourescein,
antigen detection
29Congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction
- 5 of all newborns
- absence of conjunctival injection!
- Warm compresses, gentle massage, watchful waiting
- 95 resolve by 6 months if not, refer for
probing (earlier if multiple episodes of
dacryocystitis)
30Dacryocystitis
- Bacterial infection of nasolacrimal gland with
duct obstruction - Mgt
- Swab CS
- Topical systemic antibiotics
31Gonorrheal conjunctivitis
- Hyperpurulent discharge at day 2-4
- Potentially a disaster!!
- Mgt?
- Need FSW
- Admit for antibiotics, eye irrigation, mgt of
complications corneal ulceration, scarring,
synechiae formation - Rx concomitantly for Chlamydia
- Rx mom and her partner
32Chlamydial conjunctivitis
- C. trachomatis presents on day 3-10
- (but may be up to 6 weeks)
- Mom with active untreated chlamydia babe has 40
chance of infection - Whats the real worry here?
- 10-20 have associated pneumonia untreated can
lead to chronic cough and pulmonary impairment - well with pneumonia and staccato cough
- Creps/wheezes patchy infiltrates w/
hyperinflation - CBC eosinophilia
- Rx systemic erythro x 14 days
- Treat mom and her partner,
33Herpetic conjunctivitis
- Day 2-16
- Flourescein stain dendritic ulcer
- Do FSW
- Rx
- IV acyclovir, topical vidarabine
- 30-50 of cases recur w/i 2 years
34Infantile glaucoma
- Classic triad (seen in 30)
- Epiphora
- Photophobia
- Blepharospasm
- Injected red watery eye
- Cloudy, enlarged cornea
- Cupped optic disk
- Buphthalmos if dx delayed
- Emergent referral to opthalmologist
35Case
- 3 year old girl
- URTI x 5 days
- Now R otalgia, increased fever, irritable
36Acute otitis media
- accounts for 30 of all pediatric outpatient
antimicrobial prescripitions - Diagnostic accuracy?
- We suck
- Pediatricians only 50 correct
- Pichichero et al 2001 study of 514 pediatricians
37Otitits media criteria?
- Yellow/red
- Opacity/effusion
- Immobility
- Bulging
- Loss of landmarks
38The normal TM which ear?
An annulus fibrosus Lpi long process of incus -
sometimes visible through a healthy translucent
drum Um umbo - the end of the malleus handle and
the centre of the drum Lr light reflex -
antero-inferioirly Lp Lateral process of the
malleus At Attic also known as pars flaccida Hm
handle of the malleus
39OM Bugs
- S. pneumoniae 40
- non-typeable H. influenzae 25
- M. catarrhalis 10
- others GAS, S. aureus rare
- viral 20-30!
40OM management?
- General
- Analgesics/antipyretics
- lt 2 years antibiotics x 10 days
- gt 2 years watchful waiting
- recheck in 48-72 hours
- 80 spont. resolution
- If no improvement treat w/ abx (x 5 days)
41OM - antibiotics
- 1st line (x 5 days)
- Amoxicillin 40 mg/kg/d
- Hi-dose amoxicillin 90 mg/kd/day
- If recent (lt 3 months) antibiotics exposure or
daycare or recurrent AOM - Pen-allergic erythromycin-sulfisoxasole (40
mg/kg/d erythromycin) - or
- TMP/S (6-10
mg/kg/d TMP) - Consider 10 days if recurrent AOM or perforated TM
Maximum dose not to exceed adult dose
42OM - antibiotics
- Non-responders
- Amoxicillin-clavulanate (40 mg/kg/d amox) x 10
days - /- amoxicillin (40 mg/kg/d) x
10 days - or
- Cefuroxime (40 mg/kg/d) x 10 days
- or
- Cefprozil (30 mg/kg/d) x 10 days
- B-lactam allergic
- Erythromycin-sulfisoxazole (40 mg/kg/d) x 10 days
- or
- Azithromycin (10 mg/kg 1st day, 5 mg/kg/d 4 more
days) - or
- Clarithromycin (15 mg/kg/d) x 10 days
Maximum dose not to exceed adult dose
43What about
- Decongestants?
- Anithistamines?
- Topical steroids/antibiotics?
44AOM f/u
- In 3 months
- assess for persistent OME which may lead to
hearing loss
45Recurrent AOMrisk factors
- Smoking
- Daycare
- Pacifiers
- Bottle-feeding
- Poor antibiotic compliance
46Recurrent AOMwhen to refer?
- gt 3 AOM per 6 months
- gt 4 AOM per 12 months
47Case
- 3 year old girl
- Treated for AOM x 3/7 with cephalexin abx
changed to azithro day 4 because of L facial
swelling GP attributed to drug allergy - Now day 6, presents to ED with ongoing L facial
swelling - Alert, afebrile, playful
48- otoscopic findings
- Facial expression
49Bells palsy in setting of AOM
- IV antibiotics (ceftriaxone)
- CT temporal bone
- Urgent ENT consultation
- need wide myringotomy
50Case
- 11-year-old boy
- History of chronic OM with effusion presents w/
10-day history of fever, R otalgia and right,
dull occipital headache - Alert, temperature of 38.4 C.
- Otoscopy thickened, but intact TM middle ear
effusion - Postauricular edema, erythema, tenderness, and
fluctuance - Neuro exam normal
WBC 18.7 w/ left shift CT scan of the temporal
bones soft tissue changes within the middle ear
and mastoid and an overlying subperiosteal
abscess and possible lateral sinus thrombosis.
51Mastoiditis
- Bulging erythematous tympanic membrane
- Erythema, tenderness, and edema over the mastoid
area - Postauricular fluctuance
- Protrusion of the auricle
- ED Tx IV abx (ceftriaxone), CT, ENT consult
52Whats this?
- Cholesteatoma
- Complications
- Erosion of bony labyrinth
- Facial paralysis
- Hearing loss
- Meningitis/brain abscess/hydrocephalus
- Refer to ENT tout-de-suite
53Management?
54Case
- 8 year old boy melting candles on stove
- Pot on fire grabs pot, flames his face and
hair, pulls hot burning wax over his hands, legs
standing in pool of hot wax before running from
room - Exam Alert, GCS 15, not hoarse has circumoral
1st and 2nd degree burn 15 BSA 2nd degree
burns to rest of body - Mgt?
55Fluid management
- Note that the Parkland formula is modified for
kids lt 20 kg accounts for proportionately
higher maintenance fluid req in smaller children
3 mL/kg/ burn (1/2 in 1st 8 hours) PLUS maint
fluids - Know the rule of thumb for maint fluids in kids
4-2-1 - 4 ml/kg 1st 10 kg
- 2 ml/kg 2nd 10 kg
- 1 ml/kg gt20 kg
56Example 12 kg kid with 10 BSA burn
- Conventional Parkland formula
- 4 x 12 x 10 480 mL
- ½ in 1st 8 hours 30 mL/h
- Modified formula
- 3 x 12 x 10 360 mL
- ½ in 1st 8 hours 23 mL/h
- Add maint fluid 44 mL/h
- TOTAL fluids 67 mL/h
57Case
- 3 year old boy
- c/o abdominal pain x 2/7
- No BM x 10 days having problems for 4 months
- No prev hx constipation
- Coincided with start of toilet training
- Exam normal except palpable mass LLQ
- Rectal reveals large amount of stool in vault no
fissure - Some soiling noted on underwear
- AXR
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59Case
- 3 year old boy
- No BM x 10 days having problems for 4 months
- No prev hx constipation
- Coincided with start of toilet training
- Exam normal except palpable mass LLQ
- Rectal reveals large amount of stool in vault no
fissure - Some soiling noted on underwear
- Management?
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61Functional constipationRe-train the bowel
- Often not aggressive enough
- Enemas
- adult fleets OK after age 2
- May need multiple over 2 or 3 days
- In severe cases, Go-Lytely til clear
- Toilet training strategies
- Diet fiber/fluids
- Lactulose
- 0.5 ml/kg bid, adjust prn
- Mineral oil
- 1 ml/kg hs
- Infants Karo syrup 1 tsp/8 oz formula
- GP or peds f/u important
Always consider and r/o organic causes!
62Case
- 7 day old breast-fed boy
- c/o constipation
- Mom concerned because no BM for past 3 days
- Passed mec day 1, stooled day 2 and 4
- Whats normal stool frequency?
63When is the first stool normally passed?
- 99 of infants pass 1st stool w/i 1st 24 hours
- Failure possible obstruction/anatomic/physiologi
c abnormality - 95 of Hirschprungs disease and 25 of CF do not
pass 1st stool 1st day - Prems common to have delayed passage of 1st
stool
64Case
- Constipated 6 month old boy
- Has always stooled infreq 1/week
- Also v. slow feeder
- O/E
- T 35.9, P 60, R 20, BP 90/60
- Abdomen soft, non-distended, rectal vault
contains soft stool back exam unremarkable - Appears generally hypotonic
- Dx?
Hypothyroid!
65Case
- 10 month old girl
- Very constipated for several months, suppository
dependent - Has always fed poorly
- O/E alert, small for age
- Abdo mildly distended, palpable mass LLQ
- Rectal no stool in ampulla
- Dx test?
Rectal suction biopsy Hirschprungs
66Case
- 6 month old infant with lethargy, constipation,
poor feeds x 2 days - O/E afebrile, VSS, but poor suck, gen hypotonia,
absent reflexes - Diagnosis?
- Infant botulism ingestion of spores in
honey/corn syrup source often unknown - Hospitalize may need intubation
- Treat with BIG
67Case
- 15 month boy brought to ED by paramedics after
episode of cyanosis and apnea accompanied by some
shaking of the extremities - Prev well
- Event occurred just after mom denied him a cookie
before dinner - Diagnosis?
68Breath-holding spells
- Common b/w 6 months and 4 years
- (peak 1½ - 3 yrs.)
- Benign!
- Some association w/ iron deficiency
- Mocan et al. Arch Dis Child 1999.
- Blue/cyanotic type
- Vigorous crying provoked by physical/emotional
upset leads to end-expiratory apnea - Followed by cyanosis, opisthotonus, rigidity,
loss of tone, /- brief jerking - Pallid type
- Precipitated by unexpected event that frightens
the child
69When is a BHE not a BHE?
- Precipitating event is minor or non-existent
- Hx of no or minimal crying or breath-holding
- Episode last gt 1 minute
- Period of post-episode sleepiness lasts gt 10
minutes - Convulsive component of episode is prominent and
occurs before cyanosis - Child is lt 6 months or gt 4 years old
- Consider seizure disorder or cardiac etiology
(esp long QT syndrome)
70Case
- 3 year old boy with Downs syndrome
- 1 week of fatigue, irritability, pallor
petechial rash today - No hx of fever, URTI sx, vomiting or diarrhea
- O/E pale, lethargic diffuse lymphadenopathy
and HSM
71Pediatric oncology
Cancer Distribution Survival
Leukemia 30 75
CNS 19 60
Lymphoma 13 75
Neuroblastoma 8 10-20 (stage 3,4) 75-90 (stage 1,2)
Wilms 6 90
Soft tissue 7 65
Bone 5 65
Retinoblastoma 4 95
Liver 1 45
Other 8
72Most common findings in childhood ALL?
- HSM 70
- Fever 40-60
- Lymphadenopathy 25-50
- Bleeding 25-50 w/ petechiae or purpura
- Bone/joint pain 25-40
- Fatigue 30
- Anorexia 20-35
73Most common sites of pediatric ALL extramedullary
relapse?
- CNS
- Testicular (painless swelling, usually unilateral)
74Most common cranial nerve abnormality in children
presenting w/ increased ICP secondary to
posterior fossa tumor?
75Case
- 18 month old girl presents with black eyes
developed over past week no known trauma - Also has dancing eyes and seems off balance
76Neuroblastoma
- Most common malignancy of infancy
- Mean age 20 months
- Arises from neural crest tissure (adrenal
medulla, sympathetic ganglia) - Most common presentation is painless abdo/flank
mass may see calcifications on AXR - Multiple metastases possible
- Infants may have blueberry muffin rash
- Perioribital ecchymoses and opsoclonus/mycolonus
should prompt consideration of neuroblastoma - Dx imaging, urine VMA/HVA
77Case
- 4 month old boy
- Eyes dont look right
78Retinoblastoma
- Usually confined to the eye
- 60 nonhereditary and unilateral
- 15 hereditary (AD) and unilateral
- 25 hereditary (AD) and bilateral
- Hereditary types at increased risk of other
neoplasms brain, osteosarcoma, soft tissue
sarcoma, melanomas
79Case
- 3 year-old boy with unsteady gait
- Progressively worse x 12 hours, now refusing to
walk - Had varicella 2 weeks ago
- On exam
- Afebrile, looks well
- Mild truncal unsteadiness, ataxic gait
- Normal strength and reflexes
- Diagnosis?
80Come to my ACH Grand Rounds May 27 8 a.m.
- A Balanced Approach to the Unbalanced Child
- Acute pediatric ataxia
81